46 min

Embracing Your Identity with Kimberly Bautista Cafe con Pam

    • Personal Journals

Listeners, this week we're back with Kimberly Bautista.
Kimberly is a Colombian-American award-winning writer, director, and producer. Her feature-length documentary “Justice for My Sister” about one Guatemalan woman’s determination to hold her sister’s killer accountable was broadcast on PBS Stations and TeleSUR. Part of an international campaign with UN Women throughout Latin America to end violence against women, the film encouraged audiences to break the silence about abuse. This laid the groundwork for Kimberly to found an arts nonprofit to train women of color, gender nonconforming youth, and former foster youth to make films, heal through storytelling, and overcome financial barriers to entering the TV and film industries.
Kimberly’s comedic pilot The “SweetSpot”—about a group of friends who contend with modern-day adulthood and an unconventional love triangle—premiered at the 2017 Outfest Fusion Film Festival. She’s directed 6 music videos for feminist hip hop artists, over 30 short social justice documentaries, 6 branded content spots, and co-wrote a short film about machismo in Latino families, accumulating over 22 million views.
Kimberly’s magical realism TV pilot script about women’s power to heal “Elemental Powers” was presented as a stage reading at The Second City’s LA Diversity in Comedy Festival. Kimberly’s feature film in development about a 13-year-old girl who’s secretly in a punk-ska-cumbia band against her parents’ wishes “19.99 Plus Tax” was invited to Cine Qua Non Lab’s screenwriting residency in Mexico.
Kimberly has received fellowships from Brown Girls Doc Mafia, HOLA Mexico Film Festival, HBO, the National Association of Latino Independent Producers, Ford Foundation, and several U.S. Embassies. She is a multi-grant recipient of the Princess Grace Foundation and Latino Public Broadcasting.
 
This episode is brought to you by Clarify Masterclass:
Learn the skills strategies and tools needed to confidently understand the legal and creative side of your business.
Pam Covarrubias and Taylor Tieman, aka @legalmiga to come together and talk about all the things we always get asked, all in one sitting.⁣⁣
Pam will give you the steps to conduct your own brand audit and Taylor will answer all your legal Qs.⁣⁣
They are here to help you get there, despite the changes and the shifts.⁣⁣
You are worthy of achieving your dreams with support.⁣⁣
To register head over to spreadideasmovepeople.com/clarify
 
During our conversation Kimberly and I talked about:

Embodying multiple identities and embracing them.

The shared experience of the quote "ni de aquí, ni de allá."

Being an anti-imperialist while living in the empire.

Becoming an Artivist.

Appropriation and judging those appropriating.

Healing and liberation.

Trigger Warning: Kimberly shares her sexual assault experience. Please check your mental health and skip this episode if needed. Your mental health matters.
Follow Kimberly on all things social:
Documental Señorita Extraviada. As Kim shared during the episode.
Instagram
Justice For My Sister Instagram
Twitter
Justice For My Sister Twitter
 
Follow Cafe con Pam on all things social
Instagram
Facebook
http://cafeconpam.com/
 
Join PowerSisters!
Findmypowersister.com
 
Join FREE online Recovering Procrastinator Manis Community! 
stayshining.club
 
Let’s tap about all the things on Patreon! Become a Patron here.
 
Subscribe, rate, review, and share this episode with someone you love!
And don't ever forget to Stay Shining!

Listeners, this week we're back with Kimberly Bautista.
Kimberly is a Colombian-American award-winning writer, director, and producer. Her feature-length documentary “Justice for My Sister” about one Guatemalan woman’s determination to hold her sister’s killer accountable was broadcast on PBS Stations and TeleSUR. Part of an international campaign with UN Women throughout Latin America to end violence against women, the film encouraged audiences to break the silence about abuse. This laid the groundwork for Kimberly to found an arts nonprofit to train women of color, gender nonconforming youth, and former foster youth to make films, heal through storytelling, and overcome financial barriers to entering the TV and film industries.
Kimberly’s comedic pilot The “SweetSpot”—about a group of friends who contend with modern-day adulthood and an unconventional love triangle—premiered at the 2017 Outfest Fusion Film Festival. She’s directed 6 music videos for feminist hip hop artists, over 30 short social justice documentaries, 6 branded content spots, and co-wrote a short film about machismo in Latino families, accumulating over 22 million views.
Kimberly’s magical realism TV pilot script about women’s power to heal “Elemental Powers” was presented as a stage reading at The Second City’s LA Diversity in Comedy Festival. Kimberly’s feature film in development about a 13-year-old girl who’s secretly in a punk-ska-cumbia band against her parents’ wishes “19.99 Plus Tax” was invited to Cine Qua Non Lab’s screenwriting residency in Mexico.
Kimberly has received fellowships from Brown Girls Doc Mafia, HOLA Mexico Film Festival, HBO, the National Association of Latino Independent Producers, Ford Foundation, and several U.S. Embassies. She is a multi-grant recipient of the Princess Grace Foundation and Latino Public Broadcasting.
 
This episode is brought to you by Clarify Masterclass:
Learn the skills strategies and tools needed to confidently understand the legal and creative side of your business.
Pam Covarrubias and Taylor Tieman, aka @legalmiga to come together and talk about all the things we always get asked, all in one sitting.⁣⁣
Pam will give you the steps to conduct your own brand audit and Taylor will answer all your legal Qs.⁣⁣
They are here to help you get there, despite the changes and the shifts.⁣⁣
You are worthy of achieving your dreams with support.⁣⁣
To register head over to spreadideasmovepeople.com/clarify
 
During our conversation Kimberly and I talked about:

Embodying multiple identities and embracing them.

The shared experience of the quote "ni de aquí, ni de allá."

Being an anti-imperialist while living in the empire.

Becoming an Artivist.

Appropriation and judging those appropriating.

Healing and liberation.

Trigger Warning: Kimberly shares her sexual assault experience. Please check your mental health and skip this episode if needed. Your mental health matters.
Follow Kimberly on all things social:
Documental Señorita Extraviada. As Kim shared during the episode.
Instagram
Justice For My Sister Instagram
Twitter
Justice For My Sister Twitter
 
Follow Cafe con Pam on all things social
Instagram
Facebook
http://cafeconpam.com/
 
Join PowerSisters!
Findmypowersister.com
 
Join FREE online Recovering Procrastinator Manis Community! 
stayshining.club
 
Let’s tap about all the things on Patreon! Become a Patron here.
 
Subscribe, rate, review, and share this episode with someone you love!
And don't ever forget to Stay Shining!

46 min